| geert lovink on 22 Oct 2000 15:40:18 -0000 |
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| <nettime> the e-book wars |
[The hi-jack of the e-book concept/hype by Microsoft, in close harmony with
big, traditional book publishers, well described in the salon.com article
below, could serve as a classic example of the shifting relation between the
so-called Old and New Economy. Naive, young start-ups, obsessed with their
Darwinist ideology of survival and competition, are up in arms when the Big
Boys are suddenly moving into their territory--way too early! This new
platform and distribution channel hardly has gotten time to create a market
of its own, now that the "e-book" has finally emerged out of its infancy. Is
anyone else on nettime monitoring this issue? I wonder what the old school
hypertext community has to say about the shift in the field of electronic
publishing after the Stephen King case. /geert].
http://www.salon.com/books/feature/2000/10/20/frankfurt/index.html
Oct. 20, 2000
The e-book wars
Does a glittering $100,000 prize signal the coming of age of digital
books, or a takeover bid by Microsoft and New York publishers?
By Kera Bolonik
Nobody is more eager for literary kudos than the e-book
community. This loose conglomeration of pioneers, small-business owners
and dreamers was publishing e-books -- content produced in digital
format, to be read on a computer or on special electronic reading
devices -- long before New York publishing houses suddenly became
enamored with the notion after Stephen King reportedly sold 400,000
copies of "Riding the Bullet" in less than 48 hours. And until two weeks
ago, many in the e-book community had reason to believe that they would
finally get that recognition Friday, at the Frankfurt Book Fair during
the first annual International eBook Awards ceremony.
The four winners of the awards -- for best fiction and nonfiction
original e-books, and best fiction and nonfiction e-book conversions --
will each receive $10,000, and the best overall original e-book (fiction
or nonfiction) will receive a grand prize of $100,000. Perhaps more
important to an industry that has been laboring in obscurity, the winners
will also gain the attention of publishing's major players during its
most prestigious international conference, a gathering where the rights
to books, often by authors of world renown, are sold.
But on Oct. 2, when the Microsoft-sponsored International eBook Award
Foundation (IeBAF) announced its 12 finalists, those hopes were dashed.
Almost all of the books on the shortlist were by acclaimed print authors
from big publishing houses: bestselling writers such as Colleen
McCullough and Stephen Ambrose and lauded newcomers such as Myla
Goldberg. The nominee list set off a wave of fury and corporate
conspiracy rumors among the e-literati. They see the awards both as
another example of big-time New York publishing arrogantly claiming to
have the last word on what constitute good books and as a scheme by
Microsoft to make sure that whatever e-book revolution may lie in the
future will be owned by the world's largest software company. For
e-publishing doyenne M.J. Rose, the announcement set off a 24-hour phone
marathon that resulted in her establishing the first Independent e-Book
Awards to reward the vanguard of the digital word.
The controversy over the IeBAF awards and the birth of its grass-roots
alternative (which Rose hopes will become the "Sundance of e-books")
highlight some pressing issues for e-publishing -- issues that have so
far gotten lost in either idealism about the freedom it may give authors
and independent publishers or eagerness on the part of the established
book industry to stake its claim in a new medium. Will e-books offer a
way for writers who've been snubbed by the big houses to find success
marketing their books directly to readers? Or will e-publishing simply
present the same books and authors currently found in bookstores, only in
a different, less tangible form? Will mainstream publishers' newfound
interest in the e-publishing scene bring a higher standard of literary
quality and professionalism to a community that until now was amateur in
the best and worst senses of the word? Is a small bastion of independence
being stamped out, or are e-book readers finally going to get content
they find truly enticing?
Martin Eberhard, co-founder and former CEO of NuvoMedia (creator of a
reading device called the Rocket eBook and a cosponsor of the IeBAF), and
now an Independent e-Book Awards judge, believes the roots of the
conflict are as simple as "Microsoft buttering up the big publishers so
that the big publishers will, in turn, make [Microsoft's] books
available. It was supposed to be an independent award that Microsoft was
just helping to get going."
Rose says her awards are based on her idea of the electronic form as a
means "to debut and grow new authors, to bring back the midlist, to give
a real opportunity to authors who write between genres or for niche
audiences, and [are] for innovators who envision books becoming
multimedia experiments." The objective is to "recognize the true pioneers
and creative minds," Rose says.
Mary Wolf, publisher and editor in chief of the four-year-old Hard Shell
Word Factory, an ever-growing, genre-driven e-publisher, thought that the
Frankfurt eBook Awards were supposed to "be a way to highlight electronic
publishing. We thought it was going to give us a chance to compete on an
even field. I really believed that until I saw the list of judges, all
New York publishing people." Wolf and many other e-publishers assumed
that their authors would be competing against one another, as they did in
the first annual Eppie Awards in August, sponsored by the Electronically
Published Internet Connection. Hard Shell Word Factory won in seven out
of 15 Eppie categories -- and not by having its first-time romance,
horror and mystery writers go up against a literary darling like Zadie
Smith, whose novel "White Teeth" was converted from print to e-format and
thus became an IeBAF finalist.
"When Bill Gates first announced the creation of the IeBAF, all the
e-authors I know -- and I know at least 2,000 of them -- were all really
excited," Rose recalls. "Then I saw the list of judges, none of whom are
at the forefront of this new industry, and most of whom are very much
entrenched in traditional publishing, except maybe James Gleick [author
of "Faster"]. I lost my great expectations." Eberhard seconds this
disappointment, revealing that "NuvoMedia stood next to Microsoft [at
last year's Frankfurt Book Fair, when the establishment of the IeBAF was
first announced] and volunteered effort and time and money, and we were
excluded from any say about how the judging was done, or from
contributing to the selection of judges."
The IeBAF judges are largely culled from the print world; they include
literary scout Maria Campbell, Parade magazine publisher Walter Anderson,
Library of America president Cheryl Hurley and writers Henry Louis Gates
Jr. and Daniel Boorstin. In contrast, Rose points out, the Independent
e-Book Awards panel consists solely of people dedicated to e-books, who
aim to "recognize excellence in electronic books, hypertext and digital
storytelling" (the three fiction and nonfiction categories for the
Independent e-Book Awards).
Many of the Independent e-Book Awards judges also boast a profile in
print publishing; for example, New York Review of Books co-founder and
former Random House editorial director Jason Epstein and literary agent
Loretta Barrett are among the 14 judges Rose has enlisted in the past
week. The luminaries in the e-book world include former Yahoo executive
and e-book author Seth Godin, Foreword magazine editor Mardi Link and
Electronic Literature Organization executive director Scott Rettberg.
Rose will also serve as one of the judges, turning over the organizing
reins to Sunny Ross, co-creator of the Mystic-Ink writers community in
California. The group will be soliciting original e-books exclusively
from independent houses, which can send in up to two entries per
category, and unlike the Frankfurt eBook Awards, the Independent e-Book
Awards will include self-published writers.
It is rare at this point for e-books to get review or media attention,
the two things the e-community most desperately craves. Rose reports that
the Independent e-Book Awards "are geared around attention, not money."
The short-fiction finalists will be published by Random House Audible, a
digital spoken-word imprint of Random House; first- and second-prize
winners will also get reviewed in Foreword magazine; and the winners'
works will benefit from a media campaign. The awards ceremony is
scheduled for spring 2001.
The IeBAF has a different vision of its mission, albeit a vision that is
still being shaped. Its priority, judging director Peter Mollman insists,
is not to boost what has already been done in a still nascent form, but
to demonstrate that e-books can and should measure up to the standards of
"p-books." "No one was trying to promote the big guys or anything like
that. The idea of not representing the community -- that really never
came into our minds as we were setting up the judges. The only criterion
we were looking for in the judges was an ability to be a great critic, a
great evaluator of quality and independent of mind."
According to Mollman, the IeBAF judges, who limited entries to
e-publishers that produce at least 10 e-books per year to filter out
self-published works, found that the submissions just didn't measure up
to the works of authors already established in the old media. Alberto
Vitale, former CEO of Random House under S.I. Newhouse and the chairman
of the IeBAF, thought "the purpose of what we have done was to put the
spotlight on this new technology, and that, I think, we have achieved."
Vitale sees "a major literary component to these awards, and if I'm going
to put my name to it, I want to give a prize to quality, and not the
opposite of quality." The implication is that if there are great books
out there that aren't being picked up by big New York publishers, then
e-publishers certainly aren't doing a better job of finding them.
Mollman says the judges also saw little evidence of valuable
technological innovation in the books submitted to the IeBAF this year.
Few, if any, capitalized on the medium's ability to support hypertext
links and graphics. He says the judges were all "disappointed. We believe
that publishers -- all publishers -- should take advantage of the
technology and have their e-books be more than just straight
print-to-screen extensions. We recognized that this year, everything was
new, so we stuck with literary quality."
There does seem to have been some confusion as to exactly what the
IeBAF's mission is. Rose attributes the bafflement and annoyance on both
sides to "a complication in what they [the IeBAF] expected and what they
said they were going to do. What I wondered was, did the best original
e-book mean the best-quality fiction? Or did it mean the best quality
plus marketing plus innovation? Nobody made that clear." It certainly
threw Phil Rance, managing director of Online Originals (England's first
and only e-publisher to date), for a loop. Online Originals submitted 12
titles, "picking the books that we thought were the best quality of our
work to demonstrate our range, and show that we were publishing a variety
of different works."
Mollman acknowledges the lack of clarity in the IeBAF's intentions. "This
was an inaugural year for the awards, and this issue is one of the things
we need to correct for 2001."
For Online Originals author Patricia le Roy -- one of the more successful
e-novelists, whose debut "The Angels of Russia" received a positive
review from London's Times Literary Supplement and was subsequently
published by Piatkus Books in the U.K. -- the IeBAF's selection of judges
didn't hamper her enthusiasm, at least not at first. Before the finalists
were announced, le Roy believed that the Frankfurt awards "had the
potential to become as important as the Pulitzer or the Booker." But
afterward, le Roy was "scandalized to see a shortlist drawn up with such
a frightening lack of imagination and cynical absence of responsibility.
This prize is supposed to 'extend the reach of reading'? To whom? A few
benighted souls in cyberspace who might not have heard of Ed McBain?"
The quality of the finalists also didn't strike Rance as particularly
distinctive. "They appeared to me to be B-list experiments from the major
publishing houses (predominantly Simon & Schuster, which published four
out of the 12 finalists)." Rance suspects that "the prize is on the side
of defending the status quo, which is hardly surprising, as the main
sponsors will want to align themselves with the major incumbent
publishers."
Hard Shell's Wolf sees it that way, too, and thinks "those titles aren't
original e-books. Those are print books that were brought out in
electronic form quickly, to make them eligible for the award." In one
instance, McBain's eligibility as a finalist for "best fiction work
originally published in e-book form" was called into question because the
Simon & Schuster Web site listed the hardcover publication date for
McBain's "The Last Dance" as four months earlier than that of the e-book
edition. But as Steve Zeitchik reported last week in the Industry
Standard, Simon & Schuster's Adam Rothberg declares that "the Web listing
was a mistake." Nevertheless, if the IeBAF doesn't amend its rules, or
include e-book industry members next year, Wolf vows, she will not "enter
our books for the award."
Philip Harris, founder of the literary Electron Press, publisher of
Village Voice Washington correspondent James Ridgeway and political
journalist and print author Danny Schechter, says he was suspicious about
the IeBAF from the start, and decided not to submit any titles. "It's a
promotional thing, and your chances of winning are very slight. I would
rather concentrate on getting more books out." Doug Clegg, an Independent
e-Book Awards judge whose fiction has been both published in print by
mainstream publishers Tor and Dell and self-published in e-format, can
understand why Harris and other e-publishers are wary. "It'll just be a
nice kudos for a major publisher that might be using e-books as a
publicity and promotions exercise. I don't want to see e-books become the
ads for the paperback editions the way hardcovers sometimes become the
ads for subsequent paperbacks." Clegg predicts that "based on the
nominations, these awards will have no impact on e-publishing."
Other e-publishers see the conflict as something more venal than the
clash between lofty literary standards and the desire to celebrate and
promote ingenuity. It also represents the collision of a small, fairly
intimate community of small-business people and authors with some large,
intimidating corporations that want to secure a piece of what could be a
substantial market. Book publishers don't want to be taken by surprise,
as the music industry was by the advent of the MP3 file format and
Napster, which allowed users to download music for free.
One e-book luminary, who wishes to remain nameless, says that everyone in
the e-community has been discussing the fact that Simon & Schuster,
Random House and iPublish support Microsoft ClearType. "The books that
have been picked as finalists are predominantly published by publishers
who supported ClearType, so lots of people are saying that this is
totally a corporate boondoggle, that this was a way to get Microsoft and
those publishers a little more press." The IeBAF's Mollman finds no merit
in this rumor. "The ClearType was sort of an add-on after the awards were
way down the line. I think most of the award submissions that we got were
in Rocket-eBooks, Glass Books and SoftBooks." Mollman insists that the
Frankfurt awards "were not set up as a promotion for Microsoft. The
awards were set up for the promotion of e-books."
That's not what indie judge Eberhard thinks. "The whole awards thing is
distorted, and Microsoft hijacked the awards for its own benefit. I was
talking to Alberto Vitale three or four months ago at a conference, and
he pointed out that basically his paycheck is paid by Microsoft. To me,
that's saying it without saying it."
If indeed a battle has begun, the spoils are still fairly hypothetical. A
recent survey by Seybold Research indicated considerable reader
resistance to the new format -- only 12 percent of respondents said they
were "likely" to spend money on an e-book or e-book device, and only 12
percent would read a book for pleasure on a personal digital assistant,
or PDA, such as a Palm Pilot. Today, e-book reading devices (such as the
recently unveiled REB-1100 and REB-1200 from Gemstar) cost between $199
and $600, and many e-books from the big publishing houses tend to be more
expensive than the hardcover editions. According to Publishers Weekly,
there are only 20,000 e-readers in the general populace to date, and the
top e-book sellers tend toward science fiction, technology, business and
romance -- not exactly book-award-winning fare.
Currently, Rance of Online Originals admits, "e-book sales are pretty
low, but they have doubled this past year. I think it is the technology."
To his mind, the problem has to do with the fact that "people have grown
up reading books, and many people find it hard to believe that you'd want
to consume text in any other way. We're talking about a new medium, in
the same way that video is different from cinema. Different types of
genres and writing will emerge from it." Eberhard couldn't agree more.
"The whole beauty of e-publishing is that it allows so many more books to
get published, and allows publishers to take chances on books that they
wouldn't otherwise do."
But first e-books have to catch on with consumers, and Rose doesn't think
that will happen until reading devices come down in price. Rance
pinpoints quality as another issue. "We need to be giving people content
that they really want -- that's why Stephen King was so successful. He
was giving readers something that they wanted, and they couldn't get it
any other way. If you look at what's available at most e-book sites at
the moment, even at the Barnes & Noble Web site, you don't go, 'Wow, I've
got to have that!'"
A cursory survey of e-books available from independent e-publishers
reveals works by first-time authors whose imaginations and ambitions
inspire them to meld too many genres into one narrative (call it
innovative, or just the inability to find a sales handle) or whose
writing often simply isn't good enough to capture the enthusiasm of New
York publishing houses.
And so far, p-book authors have been slow to flock to independent
e-publishers. But that is slowly changing. Online Originals has just
signed up a series of five new short stories by Frederick Forsyth,
bestselling author of "The Odessa File." "This is something of a coup for
us," says Rance. "It's really the biggest name author to have done
anything exclusively on the Web since Stephen King." Novelist Fay Weldon
is following suit, publishing her latest work, "Woodworm," in serial form
through the political Web site yougov.com, with no plans to publish it in
print. Eberhard predicts that "as the e-book market grows, more and more
writers will begin to experiment and publish this way."
It remains to be seen how either awards ceremony will impact book buyers.
Eberhard suspects that members of "the IeBAF will likely ignore the
Independent e-Book Awards. They'll act like theirs is the real one." But
he's confident that the Independent e-Book Awards "will be one of the
valuable tools that readers will look at to select what to read. This
award will garner some prestige, for it encourages those things about
e-books that make them unique. It's got to encourage creativity in the
way e-books allow creativity, and it's got to encourage the creativity of
the publishers, or even [these publishers] taking chances ... that paper
publishers wouldn't do."
Rose wholeheartedly agrees with Eberhard. "Frankfurt just isn't the thing
that I think our industry needs. While the International eBook Awards are
an important first step, there's room for another kind of show -- the
Independent e-Book Awards. I think the small publishers and authors
desperately deserve and need it."
-------
Kera Bolonik is a freelance writer. She lives in Brooklyn, N.Y.
http://www.salon.com/books/feature/2000/10/20/frankfurt/index.html
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